Dear Reader, When it comes to the biggest stock market winners of the past decade... One man from rural Pennsylvania seems to have a crystal ball. He pegged Facebook (Nasdaq: FB) when it was trading for $30 a share... Amazon (Nasdaq: AMZN) before it skyrocketed an extraordinary 1,500%... Starbucks (NYSE: SBUX) at $8 a share (It's currently trading around $88)... And Netflix (Nasdaq: NFLX) before it exploded 8 times higher.
In fact, early stage investor Matt McCall has nailed almost every major stock market prediction over the past decade. He even predicted – live on Fox Business – the exact day stocks would bottom out after the 2008 financial crisis. If you had followed his instructions on that day, you could have turned every $1,000 into $12,417. Matt McCall, now a millionaire, spends his time trying to see as much of the world as possible. (He's already explored 50 different countries.) And – remembering his humble beginnings – he also shows a small group of Americans exactly how to grow their money like he did. The secret, he claims, is finding stocks before they go on to soar 300%... 500%... and oftentimes, 1,000%. McCall's now found 200 stocks that ALL went on to jump 100% or more. Plus 16 more recommendations that skyrocketed over 1,000%. But McCall says that's nothing compared to what could happen to stocks in 2020... "We're coming up on the biggest stock market event since 2009. Most investors are scared right now, but they've got it all wrong. And they're going to be kicking themselves. I don't know when we'll see a setup like this again – it's now or never." McCall just teamed up with one of the biggest names in finance to explain his new prediction for 2020. And to publicly reveal the name and ticker of what could be the best-performing stock of the year. To see for yourself and learn the #1 stock of 2020, click here while McCall's interview is still available. Happy Holidays from our Stansberry family to yours, Allison Comotto Senior Staff Researcher, Stansberry Research Delivering world-class financial research since 1999 |